Jacqueline Chen
Affiliations: | 2012-2014 | Psychology | University of California, Davis, Davis, CA |
Google:
"Jacqueline Chen"
BETA: Related publications
See more...
Publications
You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect. |
Geerling DM, Chen JM. (2024) Contextual influences on individual targets' perceived contributions to group diversity. Journal of Experimental Psychology. General |
Chen JM, Meyers C, Pauker K, et al. (2023) Intergroup Context Moderates the Impact of White Americans' Identification on Racial Categorization of Ambiguous Faces. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin. 1461672231190264 |
Chen JM, Joel S, Castro Lingl D. (2023) Antecedents and consequences of LGBT individuals' perceptions of straight allyship. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology |
Simon D, Chen JM, Sherman JW, et al. (2022) A recognition advantage for members of higher-status racial groups. British Journal of Psychology (London, England : 1953) |
Norman JB, Franco MG, Chen JM. (2021) Multiracial individuals' experiences of rejection and acceptance from different racial groups and implications for life satisfaction. The Journal of Social Psychology. 1-21 |
Chen JM, Norman JB, Nam Y. (2020) Broadening the stimulus set: Introducing the American Multiracial Faces Database. Behavior Research Methods |
Ho AK, Kteily NS, Chen JM. (2020) Introducing the Sociopolitical Motive × Intergroup Threat Model to Understand How Monoracial Perceivers' Sociopolitical Motives Influence Their Categorization of Multiracial People. Personality and Social Psychology Review : An Official Journal of the Society For Personality and Social Psychology, Inc. 1088868320917051 |
Gaither SE, Chen JM, Pauker K, et al. (2018) At face value: Psychological outcomes differ for real vs. computer-generated multiracial faces. The Journal of Social Psychology. 1-19 |
Chen JM, Kteily NS, Ho AK. (2018) Whose Side Are You On? Asian Americans' Mistrust of Asian-White Biracials Predicts More Exclusion From the Ingroup. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin. 146167218798032 |
Chen JM, Pauker K, Gaither SE, et al. (2018) Black + White = Not White: A minority bias in categorizations of Black-White multiracials Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 78: 43-54 |